Title

Surgery With or Without Combination Chemotherapy in Treating Patients With Cancer of the Esophagus
A PROSPECTIVE RANDOMISED TRIAL OF INDUCTION CHEMOTHERAPY WITH 5-FU CONTINUOUS IV INFUSION AND CISPLATIN VERSUS SURGERY IN RESECTABLE ADENOCARCINOMA OF THE LOW THIRD OF THE ESOPHAGUS AND CARDIOESOPHAGEAL JUNCTION
  • Phase

    Phase 3
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    fluorouracil cisplatin ...
  • Study Participants

    250
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. It is not known whether combining chemotherapy with surgery is more effective than surgery alone.

PURPOSE: Randomized phase III trial to compare the effectiveness of surgery with or without combination chemotherapy in treating patients with cancer of the esophagus.
OBJECTIVES:

Compare survival in patients with operable adenocarcinoma of the lower third of the esophagus or the cardia treated with fluorouracil/cisplatin vs. no chemotherapy prior to surgical resection.
Assess whether neoadjuvant fluorouracil/cisplatin increases tumor resectability.

OUTLINE: This study is randomized for neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Patients are stratified by performance status, tumor location, and randomizing center.

Patients randomized to no neoadjuvant chemotherapy undergo resection of the tumor with adequate margins and resection of regional lymph nodes (R2 with at least 8 nodal groups recommended).

Patients randomized to neoadjuvant chemotherapy receive fluorouracil and cisplatin at 3-4 week intervals; fluorouracil is given by continuous intravenous infusion for 5 days and cisplatin is given on the first 2 days of fluorouracil administration. Tumor response is assessed after 2 courses; responding patients with no serious toxicity receive a third course. Surgery, as above, is initiated 4-6 weeks after the second or third course of chemotherapy. Upon recovery (within 3-6 weeks), patients who responded to neoadjuvant chemotherapy receive 3-4 additional courses of postoperative chemotherapy (maximum total of 6 courses). Patients whose best response was stable disease are assessed for postoperative radiotherapy.

Patients on either arm with positive resection margins, positive lymph nodes, or equivocal complete resection are referred for postoperative radiotherapy. Further therapy for patients with incomplete resection is at the discretion of the physician.

Patients are followed every 3-4 months for at least 5 years.

PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 250 patients will be entered.
Study Started
Oct 31
1996
Primary Completion
Nov 30
2006
Study Completion
Aug 31
2010
Last Update
Feb 23
2021

Drug cisplatin

Drug fluorouracil

Procedure adjuvant therapy

Procedure conventional surgery

Procedure neoadjuvant therapy

Criteria

DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:

Adenocarcinoma of the lower third of the esophagus or the cardia for which complete resection is feasible

Extension to the cardia allowed

Cancer of the cardia with extension to the esophagus or stomach allowed

No in situ cancer of the cardia
No distant metastases

PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:

Age:

Not over 75

Performance status:

WHO 0 or 1

Hematopoietic:

WBC at least 4,000
Polymorphonuclear lymphocytes greater than 2,000
Platelets at least 100,000

Hepatic:

Not specified

Renal:

Creatinine less than 1.3 mg/dL (120 micromoles/L)

Cardiovascular:

No prior myocardial infarction
No other cardiac contraindication to surgery

Pulmonary:

No respiratory contraindication to surgery

Other:

No second malignancy except:
Basal cell carcinoma of the skin
Adequately treated in situ carcinoma of the uterine cervix

PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:

Biologic therapy

Not specified

Chemotherapy

No prior chemotherapy for tumors of the cardia

Endocrine therapy

No prior radiotherapy for tumors of the cardia

Radiotherapy

Not specified

Surgery

Not specified
No Results Posted